"An eight-year-old boy with a rare childhood disease has been refused
care by at least one Canadian specialist because his mother took him to
the U.S. for a treatment not approved in B.C.

“When it’s your child, you feel outraged,” said mother Sima Hadidi,
of Surrey, B.C. “He needs to be monitored. And you just cannot punish
people because they didn’t do what you suggested.”

The same people that will be first to berate our system for spending twice as much as Canada or England would also be the first to demand an eight year old get this treatment or any other that might add even a day to his life; no matter the cost.

We can't expect the same cost outcome when we also insist on providing twice the care.

"An eight-year-old boy with a rare childhood disease has been refused
care by at least one Canadian specialist because his mother took him to
the U.S. for a treatment not approved in B.C.

“When it’s your child, you feel outraged,” said mother Sima Hadidi,
of Surrey, B.C. “He needs to be monitored. And you just cannot punish
people because they didn’t do what you suggested.”

The same people that will be first to berate our system for spending twice as much as Canada or England would also be the first to demand an eight year old get this treatment or any other that might add even a day to his life; no matter the cost.

We can't expect the same cost outcome when we also insist on providing twice the care.